IRIS publication 271354880
Priming for health: gut microbiota acquired in early life regulates physiology, brain and behaviour
RIS format for Endnote and similar
TY - - Reviews - Clarke, G,O'Mahony, SM,Dinan, TG,Cryan, JF - 2014 - August - Priming for health: gut microbiota acquired in early life regulates physiology, brain and behaviour - Validated - 1 - Altmetric: 18 () - Behaviour Brain Development Breastfeeding Early Life Microbiota INTESTINAL MICROBIOTA IMMUNE-SYSTEM HUMAN-MILK MATERNAL SEPARATION STRESS-RESPONSE INFANTS IMPACT MICE DYSFUNCTION PROBIOTICS - The infant gut microbiome is dynamic, and radical shifts in composition occur during the first 3 years of life. Disruption of these developmental patterns, and the impact of the microbial composition of our gut on brain and behaviour, has attracted much recent attention. Integrating these observations is an important new research frontier.Conclusion: Early-life perturbations of the developing gut microbiota can impact on the central nervous system and potentially lead to adverse mental health outcomes. - 812 - 819 - 10.1111/apa.12674 DA - 2014/08 ER -
BIBTeX format for JabRef and similar
@review{V271354880, = {Reviews}, = {Clarke, G and O'Mahony, SM and Dinan, TG and Cryan, JF }, = {2014}, = {August}, = {Priming for health: gut microbiota acquired in early life regulates physiology, brain and behaviour}, = {Validated}, = {1}, = {Altmetric: 18 ()}, = {Behaviour Brain Development Breastfeeding Early Life Microbiota INTESTINAL MICROBIOTA IMMUNE-SYSTEM HUMAN-MILK MATERNAL SEPARATION STRESS-RESPONSE INFANTS IMPACT MICE DYSFUNCTION PROBIOTICS}, = {{The infant gut microbiome is dynamic, and radical shifts in composition occur during the first 3 years of life. Disruption of these developmental patterns, and the impact of the microbial composition of our gut on brain and behaviour, has attracted much recent attention. Integrating these observations is an important new research frontier.Conclusion: Early-life perturbations of the developing gut microbiota can impact on the central nervous system and potentially lead to adverse mental health outcomes.}}, pages = {812--819}, = {10.1111/apa.12674}, source = {IRIS} }
Data as stored in IRIS
OTHER_PUB_TYPE | Reviews | ||
AUTHORS | Clarke, G,O'Mahony, SM,Dinan, TG,Cryan, JF | ||
YEAR | 2014 | ||
MONTH | August | ||
TITLE | Priming for health: gut microbiota acquired in early life regulates physiology, brain and behaviour | ||
RESEARCHER_ROLE | |||
STATUS | Validated | ||
PEER_REVIEW | 1 | ||
TIMES_CITED | Altmetric: 18 () | ||
SEARCH_KEYWORD | Behaviour Brain Development Breastfeeding Early Life Microbiota INTESTINAL MICROBIOTA IMMUNE-SYSTEM HUMAN-MILK MATERNAL SEPARATION STRESS-RESPONSE INFANTS IMPACT MICE DYSFUNCTION PROBIOTICS | ||
REFERENCE | |||
ABSTRACT | The infant gut microbiome is dynamic, and radical shifts in composition occur during the first 3 years of life. Disruption of these developmental patterns, and the impact of the microbial composition of our gut on brain and behaviour, has attracted much recent attention. Integrating these observations is an important new research frontier.Conclusion: Early-life perturbations of the developing gut microbiota can impact on the central nervous system and potentially lead to adverse mental health outcomes. | ||
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START_PAGE | 812 | ||
END_PAGE | 819 | ||
DOI_LINK | 10.1111/apa.12674 | ||
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